If you have AML, your myeloid cells can’t fully mature and they remain as young, immature cells called myeloblasts. These cells divide too quickly which can ‘clog up’ your bone marrow and stop other blood cells from doing their job properly too.

AML is ‘acute’ because it usually develops quickly, sometimes within a few days or weeks. There are different types of AML – your symptoms will depend on the type you have, the number of leukaemia cells in your body, and where they are.

AML can be classified into ‘high’, ‘standard’ and ‘low’ risk – but this only relates to the type of treatment you will be given, not to the chance of it working.

AML and stem cell transplants

If you have AML, it is likely that you’ll need to start treatment quickly after you’re diagnosed. You’ll normally be offered chemotherapy as your main treatment option, although this can vary because certain types of AML are treated differently.

Normally, after chemotherapy, your doctors will consider further treatment to stop the leukaemia coming back. This is where a stem cell or bone marrow transplant comes in. A high dose of chemotherapy, followed by a stem cell transplant, may be the best way to stop the cancer coming back.

Most transplants for AML are allograft transplants – when stem cells are donated to you by someone else. It’s much rarer for AML to be treated with an autologous transplant – when doctors use your own stem cells. This is usually only considered if a stem cell donor cannot be found and your medical team decide it’s a better option than other non-curative treatments.

AML is the most common reason for having an allograft transplant in the UK.

Living with AML

‘Since my transplant, I feel that life is definitely for living. I try not to waste one moment of it anymore.’Harun, who received a stem cell transplant to treat his AML when he was 23. Read his story here.

Some of our transplant recipients have also been kind enough to share their experience of treatment for AML. You can read their stories here.